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Perpetuating
World-Class Customer Service
by
Van Carpenter, The Front Porch Philosopher
In
our previous two articles, we have discussed
how a company, like yours, can establish a superior
customer service culture. This culture begins
with a commitment from management that customers
truly are the company's most valuable assets.
Secondly, a company must realize that its employees
are its best customers. The employees must be
trained, empowered and rewarded for superior
customer service. And finally, consistent service
provided by all employees is essential to retaining
and obtaining external customers for your company.
This
article will focus on ten actions that you can
take immediately to perpetuate your company's
world-class customer service. We often think
that business and personal actions that are
supposed to yield large or profitable results
have to necessarily be complex or expensive.
Not true! In customer service, it is the simple
and inexpensive actions that yield the most
results. So, what do you have to do?
This
article will focus on ten actions that you can
take immediately to perpetuate your company's
world-class customer service. We often think
that business and personal actions that are
supposed to yield large or profitable results
have to necessarily be complex or expensive.
Not true! In customer service, it is the simple
and inexpensive actions that yield the most
results. So, what do you have to do?
2)
Remember that Your EMPLOYEES Are Your Best Customers.
These are the people who are your direct representatives
to your external customers. They need to understand
management's philosophy of customer service.
Employees need to be well trained and have incentives
and recognition when they provide the superior
service that is required. Remember these are
the persons who provide the consistent service
that retains and obtains your valuable external
customers;
3)
Consistently Treat Your Customers as the Most
Important Aspect of Your Job! It doesn't matter
whether you are management or an employee in
any department; the customer is job one! They
have to come before the administration, the
paperwork, the personal chore, the next phone
call - whatever it is that is distracting you
from providing that specific customer the service
they require. Part of this is obtained through
the company culture, but mostly it is taking
personal respo4) LISTEN! Listen to your customers
and your employees. They will tell you what
they need. Don't be so busy trying to steer
them or "help" them, that you forget to listen.
Listening requires no talking. And always listen
to what your customer is "not saying". Listen
"between" the lines. That could be more important
than what they are saying. Effective listening
pays big dividends;
4)
LISTEN! Listen to your customers and your employees.
They will tell you what they need. Don't be
so busy trying to steer them or "help" them,
that you forget to listen. Listening requires
no talking. And always listen to what your customer
is "not saying". Listen "between" the lines.
That could be more important than what they
are saying. Effective listening pays big dividends;
5)
Be Timely and Follow Up! When you tell someone
you will be there at a certain time, make sure
that you are or call in advance. When you promise
deadlines, make sure that you deliver on-time
or if situations prevent that, let the customer
know well in advance of the deadline. Don't
wait to the last minute and hope that everything
works out! Have you ever had someone from a
service firm tell you that they would call you
when your purchase or service was ready? How
did you feel when they actually did call? Great,
I'm sure. Customers are so unaccustomed to good
follow through that making it a habit will guarantee
you customer service points;
6)
Under Promise and Over Deliver! Never promise
what you HOPE you can deliver. Promise only
that which you are SURE you can deliver. In
making a promise, you automatically set the
expectation for your customer. And the perceptions
created about your customer service are based
on these customer expectations. So work diligently
toward what you hope. Then if you can deliver
early, imagine the delight the customer feels
rather than disappointment!
7)
Be Option Oriented! Sometimes you can not provide
a customer what they want or in the time period
they require. Be sure to provide them options.
"I can't deliver your order today at noon, but
I could have it there at 4pm or first thing
in the morning. Will that be okay?" Having options
softens the customers' disappointment. However,
be sure not to offer too many options. That
often confuses or overwhelms the customer. Keep
your options down to one or two.
8)
Mind Your Body Language & Tone of Voice! We
will either meet a customer in person or talk
to them over the phone. Either way, our body
and voice make a difference in how that customer
perceives us. Smiling in person or on the phone
ensures that your customers will get a positive
image. Hint: look into a small mirror just as
you begin your conversation. This is an area
where training will help you hone your telephone
and interpersonal skills. Plan to take some
training! It really helps and builds confidence-
not to mention customers!
9)
Be Empathetic - Not Sympathetic! No matter how
good you become at customer service, there will
always be one difficult customer that is not
pleased with your performance. At times like
this, your best strategy is to listen and be
empathetic. Empathy means understanding your
customer's point of view, regardless of whether
or not you agree. Being sympathetic requires
you to first agree with them and often comes
across as being condescending. Be sure to employ
phrases like, " I understand how you can feel
that way." "I see your point of view." "I hear
what you are saying."
10)
Measure Constantly to Maintain Consistency!
Just as we started these suggestions with good
business practice, we will end with the same.
No program of customer service will be consistent
without an occasional adjustment. The correct
adjustment in strategy or practice can only
be determined from measuring the effectiveness
of your standards. You can measure as management,
and you can let the customer have input to the
process. The important thing to remember - measurement
ensures continued quality of service and after
all, isn't that our goal?
Consider
and implement these simple and inexpensive actions
and your company's customer service will be
the envy of your competition and the pride of
your customers. Be sure to send us examples
of companies that you think provide superior
customer service!
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Customer
Service
Where
It All Begins
The
Secret Of Success
Perpetuating
World-Class Customer Service
Delivering
Superior Customer Service
The
Customer is King...or there is NO Kingdom
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3C's
+ 3M's = Effective Communication
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Fill
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